While the weather is still warm, we are stocking up on stuff, getting in necessary doctor's visits, taking care of administrative stuff, etc. to reduce having to go out this winter.@ wrote:
(CNN)An influential model is predicting a catastrophic winter with a significant rise in coronavirus deaths.
A possible scenario sees 415,090 Covid-19 deaths by January, the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) at the University of Washington says in its latest forecast. The worst-case scenario is 600,000 deaths by January 1.
Nah.@Flash wrote:
Significant other teases that I am a 'Doomsday Prepper'. I will be starting vegetable seeds tomorrow for our fall garden.
Yeah, currently that's not a major risk age, SoCalMama. A big uncertainty and concern is whether we see a pattern like 1918's second wave, which killed young people in large numbers as well.@SoCalMama wrote:
I’m not over 65,
One study I saw said this was the most likely of three possible scenarios with COVID-19 - that we'd get a "deadly second wave." I posted that article in a thread months ago (too lazy to look it up), but basically there's a big "unknown" coming into winter. Even without a deadly mutation, some of the benefits of summer wearing off may lead to some tough times.@ wrote:
Somewhere in Europe, a mutated strain of the Spanish flu virus had emerged that had the power to kill a perfectly healthy young man or woman within 24 hours of showing the first signs of infection. . .
From September through November of 1918, the death rate from the Spanish flu skyrocketed. In the United States alone, 195,000 Americans died from the Spanish flu in just the month of October. And unlike a normal seasonal flu, which mostly claims victims among the very young and very old, the second wave of the Spanish flu exhibited what’s called a “W curve”—high numbers of deaths among the young and old, but also a huge spike in the middle composed of otherwise healthy 25- to 35-year-olds in the prime of their life.
“That really freaked out the medical establishment, that there was this atypical spike in the middle of the W,” says Harris.
Same. We saw Costco packed one day and left to come back another day.@Flash wrote:
Thus far we have been lucky as we plan our trips to the store at times when there are few customers and we go carefully masked. There have been times when we arrived at a store and the full parking lot meant we did not get out of the car. I expect that to continue so that bread, milk, eggs and fresh vegetables can be purchased, but if it doesn't, I overstock eggs, have boxes of shelf stable milk, can make bread and have fresh and frozen vegetables.
@shoptastic wrote:
Yeah, currently that's not a major risk age, SoCalMama. A big uncertainty and concern is whether we see a pattern like 1918's second wave, which killed young people in large numbers as well.@SoCalMama wrote:
I’m not over 65,
@Flash wrote:
I will be starting vegetable seeds tomorrow for our fall garden.
@panama18 wrote:
Fall garden? What do you grow in the winter? Everything I grow in the summer fails. Too hot. Maybe I'll try fall if there's stuff to grow.
@Flash wrote:
I will be starting vegetable seeds tomorrow for our fall garden.
I actually get ya.@sestrahelena wrote:
I am actually kind of weary of this whole pandemic thing.
@Madetoshop wrote:
Here we go with the hoarding again?
I feel like it would be when you go irrationally above preparedness.@Shop-et-al wrote:
It would be interesting to find out how other people distinguish between hoarding and preparedness...